Indi@Logs Vol 8 2021, Pp 11-28, ISSN: 2339-8523

Indi@Logs Vol 8 2021, Pp 11-28, ISSN: 2339-8523

Indi@logs Vol 8 2021, pp 11-28, ISSN: 2339-8523 https://doi.org/10.5565/rev/indialogs.178 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- “IS GANDHI THE HERO?”: A REAPPRAISAL OF GANDHI’S VIEWS ABOUT WOMEN IN DEEPA MEHTA’S WATER PILAR SOMACARRERA-ÍÑIGO Universidad Autónoma de Madrid [email protected] Received: 26-11-2020 Accepted: 31-01-2021 ABSTRACT Set in 1938 against the backdrop of India’s anti-colonial movement led by Gandhi, the film Water (2005) by Deepa Mehta crudely exposes one of the most demeaning aspects of the patriarchal ideology of Hinduism: the custom of condemning widows to a life of self-denial and deprivation at the ashrams. Mehta has remarked that figures like Gandhi have inspired people throughout the ages. Nonetheless, in this essay I argue that under an apparent admiration for the figure of Gandhi in the context of the emancipation of India in general and widows in particular, Water questions whether Gandhi’s doctrines about the liberation of women were effective or whether, on the contrary, they contributed to restricting women to the private realm by turning them into personifications of the Indian nation. In this context of submission and oppression of women in India, Gandhi did try to improve their conditions though he was convinced that gender is destiny and that women’s chastity is connected to India’s national honour. I argue that Mehta’s film undermines Gandhi’s idealism by presenting images of him and dialogues in which he is the topic. As a methodological approach, I propose a dialogic (Bahktin 1981) reading of the filmic text which analyses how a polyphony of voices praise and disparage the figure of Gandhi in Water. I will also analyse the film in the light of Bakhtin’s views on the hero (1983) and his notion of the “chronotope”(Bahktin 1981). KEYWORDS: Gandhi’s ideas on women; Deepa Mehta; Hinduism; Indian-Canadian cinema; Indian widows; Pre-independence India; Dialogism; Indian feminism. RESUMEN ¿Es Gandhi el héroe? Una revaluación de las ideas de Gandhi sobre las mujeres en Water de Deepa Mehta Ambientada en 1938 durante el movimiento a favor de la independencia de la India liderado por Gandhi, la película Water (2005) de Deepa Mehta expone en toda su crudeza uno de los aspectos más degradantes de la ideología patriarcal del hinduismo: la tradición de condenar a las viudas a una vida de autonegación y sacrificio en los ashrams. Según Mehta, la figura de Gandhi ha inspirado a muchas personas a lo largo de la historia. Sin embargo, en este artículo defiendo que, ante una aparente admiración por la figura de Gandhi en el contexto de la emancipación de la India en general y de las viudas en particular, Water cuestiona si las doctrinas de Gandhi sobre la liberación de la mujer fueron realmente efectivas o si, por el contrario, contribuyeron a restringir a las mujeres al ámbito privado convirtiéndolas en personificaciones de la nación india. En este “IS GANDHI THE HERO?” -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- artículo argumento, por tanto, que la película de Mehta socava el idealismo de Gandhi a través de imágenes suyas y diálogos en los que la figura de Gandhi es el centro de atención. La metodología propuesta para el análisis es una lectura dialógica (Bahktin 1981) de la película que analice la polifonía de voces que, en algunos momentos, elogia y, en otros, critica la figura de Gandhi. Asimismo, analizaré la película de Deepa Mehta siguiendo las teorías de Bahktin (1983) sobre el héroe y su concepto del “cronotopo” (Bakhtin 1981). PALABRAS CLAVE: filosofía de Gandhi; Deepa Mehta; hinduismo; cine indo-canadiense; viudas indias; pre-independencia de India; dialogismo; feminismo Introduction: Water and Deepa Mehta’s humanistic cinema Gandhian thought establishes a semantic continuity between the three films of Deepa Mehta’s “Elements Trilogy “— Fire, 1947-Earth, and Water — (Jain, 2007: 68). In Fire (1996), Ashok practices Gandhian chastity as a test for his own strength; 1947-Earth (1998) blames Gandhi for the division of the country, whereas in Water (2005), Gandhi is seen as the saviour who will bring about change (Jaidka, 2011:68). A graduate of Hindu philosophy at Delhi University, Deepa Mehta (1950, Amritsar) is a reputed Indian-Canadian director, producer, screenwriter, well-known for “challenging cultural traditions and bringing stories of oppression, injustice and violence to the fore” (McIntosh and Fung, 2019: n.p.). In her latest film, an adaptation of Shyam Selvadurai’s novel Funny Boy (1994), her broad humanism and her political preoccupation are still very much alive, as reflected in some of the early reviews: “In many ways, Funny Boy reflects the times of divisiveness we are living in today, the call for a just society, a call for humanity is finally being heard.” (Simonpillai, 2020: n.p.). Set in 1938 against the backdrop of India’s anti-colonial movement led by Gandhi, Water crudely exposes one of the most demeaning aspects of the patriarchal ideology of Hinduism: the custom of condemning widows to a life of self-denial and deprivation at the ashrams (places for retreat in the Hinduist tradition). Deepa Mehta was inspired to make Water in Varanasi when she met an old widow who took her to the ashram where she lived. In the film, the plight of widowhood is exposed through a “trinity” of widows of different ages who live in the same ashram. In order of appearance, the first widow is Chuyia, an eight-year-old girl; the second is Kalyani, a beautiful young widow who has to prostitute herself in order to support the widows’ home and who falls in love with Narayan, a young and educated Brahmin who is a follower of Gandhi’s ideas. Shakuntala, the third widow, is a middle-aged, learned and convinced Hinduist who is fully aware of the injustices to which the widows are being subjected. Water heavily relies on melodrama and pathos — 12 Indi@logs, Vol 8 2021, pp 11-28, ISSN 2339-8523 PILAR SOMACARRERA-ÍÑIGO -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- understood as a complex dialectic between emotion and thought (Williams, 1998:42) — that is deployed to raise awareness of social issues and reach large audiences. However, unlike standard melodrama, in which powerless women and children are the usual protagonists (Williams, 1998:65), these three widows are empowered in Mehta’s filmic imagination. In a conversation with the actor John Abraham (who plays Narayan), Deepa Mehta highlighted the fact that Gandhi embodied tolerance while Abraham explained that he had at first thought he was the protagonist of Water but, on second thoughts, he had realized that the real protagonist was Gandhi (Chopra, 2007: n.p). Descriptions of Gandhi as a hero abound. Barak Obama wrote in the Guest Book of the Gandhi Museum in Mumbai: “a hero not just for India but for the entire world” (quoted in Mulchandani 2012:6). Mehta herself has remarked that figures like Gandhi — and Martin Luther King — have inspired people throughout the ages (Crusellas and Bernet, 2005: n.p.). Nonetheless, in contrast to this perception that Gandhi is the “hero” of Water — and, by extension, of India — I am going to argue in this essay, under an apparent admiration for the figure of Gandhi in the context of the emancipation of India in general and of widows in particular, that Water questions whether Gandhi’s doctrines about the liberation of women were really effective or whether, on the contrary, they contributed to restricting women to the private realm by turning them into personifications of the Indian nation. In order to illustrate how Mehta approaches the figure of Gandhi, I will also draw on Bakhtin’s theories on the hero as articulated in Problems of Dostoevsky’s Poetics. Just as happens with Mehta, the hero interests Dostoevsky not as some manifestation of reality that possesses socially typical or individually characteristic traits … but as a particular view on the world and on oneself 1 (Bahktin, 1983:47). As Fincina Hopgood points out, the story of the production of Water is as compelling as that of the film itself (2006:142). In 2000, the filming of Water in the Indian holy city of Varanasi was interrupted by violent protests from Hindu fundamentalists who destroyed the sets and threatened the safety of the director and her cast. The fundamentalists alleged that Mehta’s film denigrated their religion and the sacred river of the Ganges which is a key symbol throughout the film. After the local state government in 1 Italics in the original. Indi@logs, Vol 8 2021, pp 11-28, ISSN 2339-8523 13 “IS GANDHI THE HERO?” -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Uttar Pradesh shut down the production on public safety grounds, Mehta was forced to abandon her film and ultimately shot it in secrecy four years later, re-locating to Sri Lanka, where she has recently returned to shoot Funny Boy. Women in Hinduism and Gandhi’s views about women The extreme reaction against Water can be read as symptomatic of the film’s exposing of the misogynist strain in Hinduism which undercuts the complexity of beliefs about women in Hindu sacred texts. The concept of the female in Hindu doctrine presents an essential duality: on the one hand, she is fertile, benevolent — the bestower; on the other, she is aggressive, malevolent, the destroyer (Wadley, 1977: 113). Two facets of femaleness reflect this duality. The female is, firstly, sakti (Energy/Power), which Jain calls “the concept of the superwoman manifested in Goddess Durga, Kali or Parvati” (Jaidka 2011: 21). On her first day at the ashram, Chuyia sees Shakuntala as the embodiment of the Goddess Durga, a warrior and a protective mother, who saves her from Madhumati’s evil intentions.

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